Post by account_disabled on Nov 14, 2023 1:51:59 GMT -5
Then you start seeing crazy things in the SERPs, such as websites that score high but don't 'belong' there at all. That is why Google now also says: “We see the nofollow attribute as a hint”, and that allows them to better determine the popularity of sites.” “It has been coming for a while” Jan-Willem Bobbink, Notprovided.eu “It has been coming for a while: on the one hand, Google has been trying to identify unnatural and paid links on a large scale based on their own processes. A first attempt to enrich that analysis was via the disavow tool (SEOs send in striking links themselves), but that apparently did not yield the desired results.
By now tasking webmasters with tagging sites, there is a new influx of link data: predefined links in neat groups, so that Google's training data is enriched for free. On the other hand, too many links are provided with a nofollow directive, with photo editor the result that Google received insufficient data for a representative representation of the web. Little will change for the time being because these types of changes are only implemented directly by the major publishers. Then we have to wait for platforms such as WordPress that will also fill in the new directives by default for specific configurations.
Here and there perhaps some small shifts in the search results in niches where there are relatively many nofollow links. For us as SEOs, the working method will remain the same: arrange as many links as possible without any directive whatsoever.” “How will tools respond to this” Beytullah Bulanik, Booming “I'm curious how tools like Majestic and publishers will respond to this. There is a chance that it will become more difficult to get dofollow links, as publishers want to put “rel=sponsored” on them – while it is unclear what the value of this will be.
By now tasking webmasters with tagging sites, there is a new influx of link data: predefined links in neat groups, so that Google's training data is enriched for free. On the other hand, too many links are provided with a nofollow directive, with photo editor the result that Google received insufficient data for a representative representation of the web. Little will change for the time being because these types of changes are only implemented directly by the major publishers. Then we have to wait for platforms such as WordPress that will also fill in the new directives by default for specific configurations.
Here and there perhaps some small shifts in the search results in niches where there are relatively many nofollow links. For us as SEOs, the working method will remain the same: arrange as many links as possible without any directive whatsoever.” “How will tools respond to this” Beytullah Bulanik, Booming “I'm curious how tools like Majestic and publishers will respond to this. There is a chance that it will become more difficult to get dofollow links, as publishers want to put “rel=sponsored” on them – while it is unclear what the value of this will be.